Transcript Chapter 12

Copyright © 2015 Pearson Education
Chapter 12 Learning Objectives
12.1 To understand the subcultures within the
United States and their relationships to
American culture.
12.2 To understand the influence of nationality
and ethnicity subcultures on consumer
behavior.
12.3 To understand the impact of religious
affiliations on consumer behavior.
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Chapter 12 Learning Objectives
12.4 To understand the influence of regional
characteristics on consumer behavior.
12.5 To understand age and generational
influences on consumer behavior.
12.6 To understand the influence of gender on
consumer behavior.
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Opening Vignette
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Learning Objective 12.1
12.1 To understand the subcultures within the
United States and their relationships to
American culture.
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Subculture
A distinct cultural group that exists as
an identifiable segment within a
larger, more complex society. A
subculture has beliefs, values, and
customers that set them apart from
the other members of the same
society.
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Society’s Cultural Profile
Two elements:
• Unique beliefs, values
and customs of specific
subcultures
• Central or core cultural
values and customs
shared by most of the
population, regardless
of subcultural
memberships
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Discussion Questions
• To which subcultures do you belong?
• How does it affect your consumer
purchases?
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Learning Objective 12.2
12.2 To understand the influence of nationality
and ethnicity subcultures on consumer
behavior.
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Latino (Hispanic) Consumers
• Growing population (30% of the U.S.
population by 2050; 133 million)
• Purchasing power of $1.2 trillion in 2011
• Young with large families
• 77% of Latino Americans live in 7 states
• 12 distinct Hispanic subgroups
• Loyal to well-established brands and smaller
stores
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Targeting Hispanic Consumers
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African American Consumers
• Purchasing power of $1 trillion
• Young – > 50% less than 35 years old
• Prefer leading brands over private-label
brands/ brand loyal
• Spend more then other segments on
hair, clothing and telephone services
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Asian American Consumers
• Fastest growing racial segment
• Diverse group including 6 major
ethnicities:
– Chinese, Filipino, Indian, Vietnamese, Korean,
and Japanese
• 95% live in metropolitan areas
• Business ownership and educational
attainment are high
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TV Viewing Habits by Ethnicity
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Product Usage by Segment
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Learning Objective 12.3
12.3 To understand the impact of religious
affiliations on consumer behavior.
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Religion and Consumer Behavior
• Born-again Christians –
– fastest-growing
– loyal to brands that support their causes/views
• Jewish consumers – dietary laws
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Learning Objective 12.4
12.4 To understand the influence of regional
characteristics on consumer behavior.
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Targeting Urban Consumers
• New York – Highest purchase/usage of frozen
yogurt and catalog/Internet orders
• Boston – Highest purchase/usage of frozen pizza
• Chicago – Highest purchase/usage of energy drinks
and board games
• Atlanta – Highest purchase/usage of mouthwash
• San Francisco – Highest purchase/usage of
massage and highest recycling
• Los Angeles – Highest purchase/usage of frozen
yogurt
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Learning Objective 12.5
12.5 To understand age and generational
influences on consumer behavior.
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Generational Subcultures
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Generation Z
• Also known as Digital Natives or the
Homeland Generation
• Highly connected
• Most are children of Generation X
• Most diverse American generation ever
• Expected to earn less than their parents
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Teens and Tweens
Fickle customers and changing lifestyles
Teens
• Aged 13-17
• More independent in their
behavior
• Alienated by marketers
who talk down to them
• Surf the Internet, create
content
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Tweens
• Aged 8-12
• Share many traits with
younger siblings
• Families important to
tweens in terms of social
lives
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Generation Y
• Embrace technology
• Confident
• Want fast product
turnover, personally
relevant promotions
and interactive
marketing platforms
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Six Segments of Millenials
• Hip-ennials
• Millenial Moms
• Anti-Millenials
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• Gadget Gurus
• Clean and Green Millenials
• Old-School Millenials
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Generation X
• Spending power > $1
trillion
• Cynical; do not like to
be singled out/
marketed to
• Do not like labels
• Purchase prestigious
and pricey brands
• Oppose insincerity
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Baby Boomers
• > 40% of the U.S. adult
population
• Consumption oriented
and influential
• 65-75% of disposable
income in the U.S.
• Want to look and feel
young
• Yuppies = status brand
consumers
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Postretirement Segments
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Older Consumers
• Cognitive age
– Feel age
– Look age
– Do age
– Interest age
• Chronological age categories
• New-age elderly
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Marketing to Older Consumers
• Promotional appeals
– Promote the right
products
– Use the right appeals
– Focus on the future
– Use emotional appeals
• Older people and
technology
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Discussion Question
• How might the three senior segments differ
in their consumption of food products?
• How might a marketer of a food product
market differently to the three subgroups?
• How might cognitive age affect the
consumption of food products? Explain.
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Learning Objective 12.6
12.6 To understand the influence of gender on
consumer behavior.
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Men vs. Women
Men
• Superior affect and
purchase intentions as a
result of ads that are
comparative, simple and
attribute-oriented.
• Less loyal to local
merchants than female
counterparts.
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Women
• Superior affect and purchase
intentions as a result of ads
that are verbal, harmonious,
complex and category
oriented.
• Shopping motives
–
–
–
–
Uniqueness
Assortment seeking
Social interaction
Browsing
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Role of Gender
• Consumer products and sex roles
• Depictions of women in media and
advertising
• Working women
– Stay-at-home housewives
– Plan-to-work housewives
– Just-a-job working women
– Career-oriented working women
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